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1.
FKBP22 from a psychrotrophic bacterium Shewanella sp. SIB1, is a dimeric protein with peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) activity. According to homology modeling, it consists of an N-terminal domain, which is involved in dimerization of the protein, and a C-terminal catalytic domain. A long alpha3 helix spans these domains. An N-domain with the entire alpha3 helix (N-domain+) and a C-domain with the entire alpha3 helix (C-domain+) were overproduced in Escherichia coli in a His-tagged form, purified, and their biochemical properties were compared with those of the intact protein. C-domain+ was shown to be a monomer and enzymatically active. Its optimum temperature for activity (10 degrees C) was identical to that of the intact protein. Determination of the PPIase activity using peptide and protein substrates suggests that dimerization is required to make the protein fully active for the protein substrate or that the N-domain is involved in substrate-binding. The differential scanning calorimetry studies revealed two distinct heat absorption peaks at 32.5 degrees C and 46.6 degrees C for the intact protein, and single heat absorption peaks at 44.7 degrees C for N-domain+ and 35.6 degrees C for C-domain+. These results indicate that the thermal unfolding transitions of the intact protein at lower and higher temperatures represent those of C- and N-domains, respectively. Because the unfolding temperature of C-domain+ is much higher than its optimum temperature for activity, SIB1 FKBP22 may adapt to low temperatures by increasing a local flexibility around the active site. This study revealed the relationship between the stability and the activity of a psychrotrophic FKBP22.  相似文献   

2.
Troponin C (TnC) is the Ca(2+)-binding subunit of the troponin complex of vertebrate skeletal muscle. It consists of two structurally homologous domains, N and C, connected by an exposed alpha-helix. The C-domain has two high-affinity sites for Ca(2+) that also bind Mg(2+), whereas the N-domain has two low-affinity sites for Ca(2+). Previous studies using isolated N- and C-domains showed that the C-domain apo form was less stable than the N-domain. Here we analyzed the stability of isolated N-domain (F29W/N-domain) against urea and pressure denaturation in the absence and in the presence of glycerol using fluorescence spectroscopy. Increasing the glycerol concentration promoted an increase in the stability of the protein to urea (0-8 M) in the absence of Ca(2+). Furthermore, the ability to expose hydrophobic surfaces normally promoted by Ca(2+) binding or low temperature under pressure was partially lost in the presence of 20% (v/v) glycerol. Glycerol also led to a decrease in the Ca(2+) affinity of the N-domain in solution. From the ln K(obs) versus ln a(H)2(O), we obtained the number of water molecules (63.5 +/- 8.7) involved in the transition N <=>N:Ca(2) that corresponds to an increase in the exposed surface area of 571.5 +/- 78.3 A(2). In skinned fibers, the affinity for Ca(2+) was also reduced by glycerol, although the effect was much less pronounced than in solution. Our results demonstrate quantitatively that the stability of this protein and its affinity for Ca(2+) are critically dependent on protein hydration.  相似文献   

3.
The betagamma-crystallin superfamily consists of a class of homologous two-domain proteins with Greek-key fold. Protein S, a Ca(2+)-binding spore-coat protein from the soil bacterium Myxococcus xanthus exhibits a high degree of sequential and structural homology with gammaB-crystallin from the vertebrate eye lens. In contrast to gammaB-crystallin, which undergoes irreversible aggregation upon thermal unfolding, protein S folds reversibly and may therefore serve as a model in the investigation of the thermodynamic stability of the eye-lens crystallins. The thermal denaturation of recombinant protein S (PS) and its isolated domains was studied by differential scanning calorimetry in the absence and in the presence of Ca(2+) at varying pH. Ca(2+)-binding leads to a stabilization of PS and its domains and increases the cooperativity of their equilibrium unfolding transitions. The isolated N-terminal and C-terminal domains (NPS and CPS) obey the two-state model, independent of the pH and Ca(2+)-binding; in the case of PS, under all conditions, an equilibrium intermediate is populated. The first transition of PS may be assigned to the denaturation of the C-terminal domain and the loss of domain interactions, whereas the second one coincides with the denaturation of the isolated N-terminal domain. At pH 7.0, in the presence of Ca(2+), where PS exhibits maximal stability, the domain interactions at 20 degrees C contribute 20 kJ/mol to the overall stability of the intact protein.  相似文献   

4.
D Missiakas  J M Betton  P Minard  J M Yon 《Biochemistry》1990,29(37):8683-8689
The role of domains as folding units was investigated with a two-domain protein, yeast phosphoglycerate kinase. Each of the domains was produced independently by site-directed mutagenesis. It has been previously demonstrated by several criteria that these domains are able to fold in vivo into a quasi-native structure [Minard et al. (1989a) Protein Eng. 3, 55-60; Fairbrother et al. (1989) Protein Eng. 3, 5-11]. In the present study, the reversibility of the unfolding-refolding process induced by guanidine hydrochloride was investigated for the intact protein and the isolated domains. The transitions were followed by circular dichroism for both domains and the intact protein and by the variations in enzyme activity for the intact protein. Tryptophan residues were used as intrinsic conformational probes of the C-domain. An extrinsic fluorescent probe, N-[[(iodoacetyl)amino]ethyl]-8-naphthylamine-1-sulfonic acid (IAEDANS), was bound to the unique cysteinyl residue Cys97 to observe the conformational events in the N-domain. The unfolding-refolding transitions of each domain in the intact protein and in the isolated domains prepared by site-directed mutagenesis were compared. It was shown that the two domains are able to refold in a fully reversible process. A hyperfluorescent intermediate was detected during the folding of both the isolated C-domain and the intact yeast phosphoglycerate kinase. The stability of each isolated domain was found to be similar, the free energy of unfolding being approximately half that of the intact molecule.  相似文献   

5.
Recombinant calreticulin and discrete domains of calreticulin were expressed in Escherichia coli, using the glutathione S-transferase fusion protein system, and their Ca2+ binding properties were determined. Native calreticulin bound 1 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein with high affinity, and also bound approximately 20 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein with low affinity. Both Ca2+ binding sites were present in the recombinant calreticulin indicating that proper folding of the protein was achieved using this system. Calreticulin is structurally divided into three distinct domains: the N-domain encompassing the first 200 residues; the P-domain which is enriched in proline residues (residue 187-317); and the C-domain which covers the carboxyl-terminal quarter of the protein (residues 310-401), and contains a high concentration of acidic residues. These domains were expressed in E. coli, isolated, and purified, and their Ca2+ binding properties were analyzed. The C-domain bound approximately 18 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein with a dissociation constant of approximately 2 mM. The P-domain bound approximately 0.6-1 mol of Ca2+/mol of protein with a dissociation constant of approximately 10 microM. The P-domain and the C-domain, when expressed together as the P+C-domain, bound Ca2+ with both high affinity and low affinity, reminiscent of both full length recombinant calreticulin and native calreticulin. In contrast the N-domain, did not bind any detectable amount of 45Ca2+. We conclude that calreticulin has two quite distinct types of Ca2+ binding sites, and that these sites are in different structural regions of the molecule. The P-domain binds Ca2+ with high affinity and low capacity, whereas the C-domain binds Ca2+ with low affinity and high capacity.  相似文献   

6.
Elongation factor Ts (EF-Ts) from Thermus thermophilus forms a stable, functionally active homodimer in solution. Its monomer is composed of two domains: amino-terminal domain containing 50 amino acid residues and a larger, 146 residues long, C-domain which participates in dimerization of EF-Ts. Effect of removal of the N-domain on the conformational stability of EF-Ts has been studied. For comparison, the stabilities of both the full-length EF-Ts and its C-domain were studied by differential scanning calorimetry, electronic absorption and fluorescence spectroscopies over a pH range from 4 to approximately 13. Thermal denaturation of EF-Ts and of C-domain, followed by circular dichroism at 222 nm, at pH 7.0, and the pH dependence of the fluorescence of the single tryptophan 30 residue indicate a conformational instability of the N-domain. While N-domain does not affect the stability of full-length EF-Ts at acidic pH, its removal leads to stabilization of the rest of the protein at basic pH. This is reflected by higher values of transition temperatures and calorimetric enthalpies of C-domain as compared to the full-length EF-Ts. High mobility of the N-domain in alkaline pH conditions decreased the thermal stability of covalently linked C-domain of EF-Ts. An increase in intramolecular interactions at acidic pH together with a decrease of conformational entropies of the thermally denatured proteins most likely diminishes this destabilization effect.  相似文献   

7.
Protein S from Myxococcus xanthus is a member of the beta gamma-crystallin superfamily. Its N and C-terminal domains (NPS and CPS, respectively) show a high degree of structural similarity and possess the capacity to bind two calcium ions per domain. For NPS, their positions were determined by X-ray diffraction at 1.8 A resolution, making use of molecular replacement with the NMR structure as search model. The overall topology of NPS is found to be practically the same as in complete protein S. In natural protein S, the domains fold independently, with a significant increase in stability and cooperativity of folding in the presence of Ca2+. The recombinant isolated domains are stable monomers which do not show any tendency to combine to "nicked" full-length protein S. In order to investigate the stability and folding of natural protein S and its isolated domains, spectroscopic techniques were applied, measuring the reversible urea and temperature-induced unfolding transitions at varying pH. The increment of Ca2+ to the free energy of stabilization amounts to -10 and -5 kJ/mol for NPS and CPS, respectively. For both NPS and CPS, in the absence and in the presence of 3 mM CaCl2, the two-state model is valid. Comparing DeltaGU-->N for CPS (-21 kJ/mol at pH 7, liganded with Ca2+) with its increment in the intact two-domain protein, the stability of the isolated domain turns out to be decreased in a pH-dependent manner. In contrast, the stability of Ca2+-loaded NPS (DeltaGU-->N=-31 kJ/mol, pH 7) is nearly unchanged down to pH 2 where Ca2+ is released (DeltaGU-->N=-26 kJ/mol, pH 2). In intact protein S, the N-terminal domain is destabilized relative to NPS. Evidently, apart from Ca2+ binding, well-defined domain interactions contribute significantly to the overall stability of intact protein S.  相似文献   

8.
Escherichia coli phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) is resistant to proteolytic cleavage while the yeast homolog from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is not. We have explored the biophysical basis of this surprising difference. The sequences of these homologs are 39% identical and 56% similar. Determination of the crystal structure for the E. coli protein and comparison to the previously solved yeast structure reveals that the two proteins have extremely similar tertiary structures, and their global stabilities determined by equilibrium denaturation are also very similar. The extrapolated unfolding rate of E. coli PGK is, however, 10(5) slower than that of the yeast homolog. This surprisingly large difference in unfolding rates appears to arise from a divergence in the extent of cooperativity between the two structural domains (the N and C-domains) that make up these kinases. This is supported by: (1) the C-domain of E. coli PGK cannot be expressed or fold independently of the N-domain, while both domains of the yeast protein fold in isolation into stable structures and (2) the energetics and kinetics of the proteolytically sensitive state of E. coli PGK match those for global unfolding. This suggests that proteolysis occurs from the globally unfolded state of E. coli PGK, while the characteristics defining the yeast homolog suggest that proteolysis occurs upon unfolding of only the C-domain, with the N-domain remaining folded and consequently resistant to cleavage.  相似文献   

9.
Troponin C (TnC) is an 18-kDa acidic protein of the EF-hand family that serves as the trigger for muscle contraction. In this study, we investigated the thermodynamic stability of the C-domain of TnC in all its occupancy states (apo, Mg (2+)-, and Ca (2+)-bound states) using a fluorescent mutant with Phe 105 replaced by Trp (F105W/C-domain, residues 88-162) and (1)H NMR spectroscopy. High hydrostatic pressure was employed as a perturbing agent, in combination with urea or without it. On the basis of changes in Trp emission, the C-domain apo state was denatured by pressure (in the range of 1-1000 bar) in the absence of urea. The fluorescence data were corroborated by following the changes in the (1)H NMR signal of Histidine 128. Addition of Ca (2+) or Mg (2+) increased the C-domain stability so that complete denaturation was attained only by the combined use of high hydrostatic pressure and either 7-8 M or 1.5-2 M urea, respectively. The (1)H NMR spectra in the presence of Ca (2+) was typical of a highly structured protein and allowed us to follow the changes in the local environment of several amino-acid residues as a function of pressure at 4 M Urea. Different residues presented different volume changes, but those that are in the hydrophobic core portrayed values very similar to that obtained for tryptophan 105 as measured by fluorescence, indicating that it is indeed a good probe for the overall tertiary structure. From these experiments, we calculated the thermodynamic parameters (Delta G degrees atm and Delta V) that govern the folding of the C-domain in all its possible physiological states and constructed a thermodynamic cycle. Furthermore, a comparison of the volume and free-energy changes of folding of isolated C-domain with those of intact TnC (F105W) revealed that the N-domain has little effect on the structure of the C-domain, even in the presence of Ca (2+). The volume and free-energy diagrams reveal a landscape of different conformations from the less structured, denatured apo form to the highly structured, Ca (2+)-bound form. The large change in folding free energy of the C-domain that takes place when Ca (2+) binds may explain the much higher Ca (2+) affinity of sites III and IV, 2 orders of magnitude higher than the affinity of sites I and II.  相似文献   

10.
Somatic angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) consists of two homologous domains, each domain bearing a catalytic site. Differential scanning calorimetry of the enzyme revealed two distinct thermal transitions with melting points at 55.3 and 70.5 degrees C. which corresponded to denaturation of C- and N-domains, respectively. Different heat stability of the domains underlies the methods of acquiring either single active N-domain or active N-domain with inactive C-domain within parent somatic ACE. Selective denaturation of C-domain supports the hypothesis of independent folding of the two domains within the ACE molecule. Modeling of ACE secondary structure revealed the difference in predicted structures of the two domains, which, in turn, allowed suggestion of the region 29-133 in amino acid sequence of the N-part of the molecule as responsible for thermostability of the N-domain.  相似文献   

11.
The study of guanidine-HCl or thermal denaturation of diferric ovotransferrin (Fe2Tf) has revealed a simultaneous unfolding of the two domains of the protein (Ikeda et al. (1985) FEBS Lett. 182, 305-309). In urea denaturation of Fe2Tf, however, two distinct steps of unfolding were observed in the urea concentration range from 4.5 to 9 M at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C by measuring the residual iron-bound protein (absorbance at 465 nm) and the remaining folded structures (circular dichroism at 222 nm). From a study of urea denaturation of partially iron-saturated Tf whose iron preferentially occupied the N-domain, it was found that the first and the second steps of denaturation corresponded to those of the N-terminal (4.5-6 M urea) and C-terminal domains (over 7 M urea), respectively. The N-domain of Fe2Tf was selectively unfolded in 7 M urea and digested with trypsin to provide an iron-bound C-terminal fragment (42 kDa) in good yield (about 80% of theoretical). The kinetic analysis of the decrease in A465 of Fe2Tf in 9 M urea showed that the N-domain unfolded 3 x 10(2) times faster than the C-domain. With partially iron-saturated Tf, the decrease of A465 in 9 M urea also proceeded in a biphasic manner and the ratio, the decrement in A465 of the rapid phase/the decrement in A465 of the slow phase, gave the value of iron distribution as Fe at the N-site/Fe at the C-site.  相似文献   

12.
We have determined the solution structure of calmodulin (CaM) from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) (yCaM) in the apo state by using NMR spectroscopy. yCaM is 60% identical in its amino acid sequence with other CaMs, and exhibits its unique biological features. yCaM consists of two similar globular domains (N- and C-domain) containing three Ca(2+)-binding motifs, EF-hands, in accordance with the observed 3 mol of Ca(2+) binding. In the solution structure of yCaM, the conformation of the N-domain conforms well to the one of the expressed N-terminal half-domains of yCaM [Ishida, H., et al. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 13660-13668]. The conformation of the C-domain basically consists of a pair of helix-loop-helix motifs, though a segment corresponding to the forth Ca(2+)-binding site of CaM deviates in its primary structure from a typical EF-hand motif and loses the ability to bind Ca(2+). Thus, the resulting conformation of each domain is essentially identical to the corresponding domain of CaM in the apo state. A flexible linker connects the two domains as observed for CaM. Any evidence for the previously reported interdomain interaction in yCaM was not observed in the solution structure of the apo state. Hence, the interdomain interaction possibly occurs in the course of Ca(2+) binding and generates a cooperative Ca(2+) binding among all three sites. Preliminary studies on a mutant protein of yCaM, E104Q, revealed that the Ca(2+)-bound N-domain interacts with the apo C-domain and induces a large conformational change in the C-domain.  相似文献   

13.
The thermal unfolding of xylanase A from Streptomyces lividans, and of its isolated substrate binding and catalytic domains, was studied by differential scanning calorimetry and Fourier transform infrared and circular dichroism spectroscopy. Our calorimetric studies show that the thermal denaturation of the intact enzyme is a complex process consisting of two endothermic events centered near 57 and 64 degrees C and an exothermic event centered near 75 degrees C, all of which overlap slightly on the temperature scale. A comparison of the data obtained with the intact enzyme and isolated substrate binding and catalytic domains indicate that the lower- and higher-temperature endothermic events are attributable to the thermal unfolding of the xylan binding and catalytic domains, respectively, whereas the higher-temperature exothermic event arises from the aggregation and precipitation of the denatured catalytic domain. Moreover, the thermal unfolding of the two domains of the native enzyme are thermodynamically independent and differentially sensitive to pH. The unfolding of the substrate binding domain is a reversible two-state process and, under appropriate conditions, the refolding of this domain to its native conformation can occur. In contrast, the unfolding of the catalytic domain is a more complex process in which two subdomains unfold independently over a similar temperature range. Also, the unfolding of the catalytic domain leads to aggregation and precipitation, which effectively precludes the refolding of the protein to its native conformation. These observations are compatible with the results of our spectroscopic studies, which show that the catalytic and substrate binding domains of the enzyme are structurally dissimilar and that their native conformations are unaffected by their association in the intact enzyme. Thus, the calorimetric and spectroscopic data demonstrate that the S. lividans xylanase A consists of structurally dissimilar catalytic and substrate binding domains that, although covalently linked, undergo essentially independent thermal denaturation. These observations provide valuable new insights into the structure and thermal stability of this enzyme and should assist our efforts at engineering xylanases that are more thermally robust and otherwise better suited for industrial applications.  相似文献   

14.
Cytokinesis is the process by which one cell divides into two. Key in the cytokinetic mechanism of Schizosaccharomyces pombe is the contractile ring myosin, which consists of two heavy chains (Myo2p), two essential light chains (Cdc4p), and two regulatory light chains (Rlc1p). Cdc4p is a dumbbell-shaped EF-hand protein composed of N- and C-terminal domains separated by a flexible linker. The properties of these two domains are of particular interest because each is hypothesized to have independent functions in binding different components of the cytokinesis machinery. To help define these properties, we used NMR spectroscopy to compare the structure, stability, and dynamics of the isolated N- and C-terminal domains with one another and with native Cdc4p. On the basis of invariant chemical shifts, the N-domain retains the same structure in isolation as in the context of the full-length Cdc4p, whereas the C-domain appears markedly perturbed. This perturbation results from intramolecular binding of the residual linker sequence at the N-terminus of the C-domain in a mode similar to that used by native Cdc4p to associate with target polypeptide sequences. NMR relaxation, thermal denaturation, and amide hydrogen exchange experiments also indicate that the C-domain is less stable and more dynamic than the N-domain, both in isolation and in the full-length protein. We hypothesize that these properties reflect a conformational plasticity of the C-domain, which may allow Cdc4p to interact with several regulatory or contractile ring proteins necessary for cytokinesis.  相似文献   

15.
We have determined the thermodynamic stability and peptide binding affinity of the carboxy-terminal Src homology 3 (SH3) domain from the Caenorhabditis elegans signal-transduction protein Sem-5. Despite its small size (62 residues) and lack of disulfide bonds, this domain is highly stable to thermal denaturation--at pH 7.3, the protein has a Tm of 73.1 degrees C. Interestingly, the protein is not maximally stable at neutral pH, but reaches a maximum at around pH 4.7 (Tm approximately equal to 80 degrees C). Increasing ionic strength also stabilizes the protein, suggesting that 1 or more carboxylate ions are involved in a destabilizing electrostatic interaction. By guanidine hydrochloride denaturation, the protein is calculated to have a free energy of unfolding of 4.1 kcal/mol at 25 degrees C. We have also characterized binding of the domain to 2 different length proline-rich peptides from the guanine nucleotide exchange factor, Sos, one of Sem-5's likely physiological ligands in cytoplasmic signal transduction. Upon binding, these peptides cause about a 2-fold increase in fluorescence intensity. Both bind with only modest affinities (Kd approximately equal to 30 microM), lower than some previous estimates for SH3 domains. By fluorescence, the domain also appears to associate with the homopolymer poly-L-proline in a similar fashion.  相似文献   

16.
FprA, a Mycobacterium tuberculosis NADPH-ferredoxin reductase, consists of two structural domains, a FAD-binding and a NADP-binding domain, respectively. For the first time, we demonstrated that native FprA, on thermal treatment underwent partial denaturation with unfolding of only the FAD-binding domain and release of the protein-bound flavin. The NADP-binding domain of this protein is highly resistant to denaturation under these conditions. However, the presence of either 150 mM NaCl or KCl or 10 muM MgCl(2) or CaCl(2) or slightly acidic pH of 6.0 resulted in a highly cooperative and complete thermal unfolding of the protein. Physicochemical investigations showed that the monovalent cations or low concentrations of divalent cations induced compaction of the protein conformation. However, divalent cations at higher concentrations resulted in FAD release leading to stabilization of an enzymatically inactive apoenzyme. Detailed thermal denaturation studies on the native protein and the isolated NADP-binding domain showed that cations and pH 6.0 destabilized only the heat-stable NADP-binding domain. The experimental studies demonstrate that modulation of intramolecular ionic interactions induce significant conformational changes in the NADP-binding domain of FprA, resulting in a substantial increase in the structural cooperativity of the whole molecule. The results presented in this paper are of importance as they demonstrate alterations in the native three-dimensional structure of FprA and cooperativity in protein molecule on slight alteration of pH or modification of ionic interactions in protein.  相似文献   

17.
This work shows that the partial replacement of diamagnetic Ca2+ by paramagnetic Tb3+ in Ca2+/calmodulin systems in solution allows the measurement of interdomain NMR pseudocontact shifts and leads to magnetic alignment of the molecule such that significant residual dipolar couplings can be measured. Both these parameters can be used to provide structural information. Species in which Tb3+ ions are bound to only one domain of calmodulin (the N-domain) and Ca2+ ions to the other (the C-domain) provide convenient systems for measuring these parameters. The nuclei in the C-domain experience the local magnetic field induced by the paramagnetic Tb3+ ions bound to the other domain at distances of over 40 A from the Tb3+ ion, shifting the resonances for these nuclei. In addition, the Tb3+ ions bound to the N-domain of calmodulin greatly enhance the magnetic susceptibility anisotropy of the molecule so that a certain degree of alignment is produced due to interaction with the external magnetic field. In this way, dipolar couplings between nuclear spins are not averaged to zero due to solution molecular tumbling and yield dipolar coupling contributions to, for example, the one-bond 15N-1H splittings of up to 17 Hz in magnitude. The degree of alignment of the C-domain will also depend on the degree of orientational freedom of this domain with respect to the N-domain containing the Tb3+ ions. Pseudocontact shifts for NH groups and 1H-15N residual dipolar couplings for the directly bonded atoms have been measured for calmodulin itself, where the domains have orientational freedom, and for the complex of calmodulin with a target peptide from skeletal muscle myosin light chain kinase, where the domains have fixed orientations with respect to each other. The simultaneous measurements of these parameters for systems with domains in fixed orientations show great potential for the determination of the relative orientation of the domains.  相似文献   

18.
Ca2+ binding to calmodulin was measured in the presence of mastoparan or caldesmon fragment. Mastoparan and caldesmon fragment were used as model compounds of enzymes and cytoskeleton proteins, respectively, working as the target of calmodulin. Although the Ca2+ bindings of the two globular domains of calmodulin occur independently in the absence of the target peptide (or proteins), mastoparan and caldesmon fragment increased the affinity of Ca2+ and, at the same time, produced the positive cooperative Ca2+ bindings between the two domains. The result of Ca2+ binding was compared with 1H NMR spectra of calmodulin in the presence of equimolar concentration of mastoparan. It is known that a conformation change of the C-terminal half-region (C-domain) occurs by the Ca2+ binding to C-domain. A further change in conformation of C-domain was demonstrated by the Ca2+ binding to the N-terminal half-region (N-domain) in the presence of mastoparan. It indicates that the two domains of calmodulin get into communication with each other in the associated state with the target, and we concluded that the Ca2+ binding to the N-domain is responsive to the development of calmodulin function.  相似文献   

19.
Fragment complementation of calbindin D28k   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Calbindin D28k is a highly conserved Ca2+-binding protein abundant in brain and sensory neurons. The 261-residue protein contains six EF-hands packed into one globular domain. In this study, we have reconstituted calbindin D28k from two fragments containing three EF-hands each (residues 1-132 and 133-261, respectively), and from other combinations of small and large fragments. Complex formation is studied by ion-exchange and size-exclusion chromatography, electrophoresis, surface plasmon resonance, as well as circular dichroism (CD), fluorescence, and NMR spectroscopy. Similar chromatographic behavior to the native protein is observed for reconstituted complexes formed by mixing different sets of complementary fragments, produced by introducing a cut between EF-hands 1, 2, 3, or 4. The C-terminal half (residues 133-261) appears to have a lower intrinsic stability compared to the N-terminal half (residues 1-132). In the presence of Ca2+, NMR spectroscopy reveals a high degree of structural similarity between the intact protein and the protein reconstituted from the 1-132 and 133-261 fragments. The affinity between these two fragments is 2 x 10(7) M(-1), with association and dissociation rate constants of 2.7 x 10(4) M(-1) s(-1) and 1.4 x 10(-3) s(-1), respectively. The complex formed in the presence of Ca2+ is remarkably stable towards unfolding by urea and heat. Both the complex and intact protein display cold and heat denaturation, although residual alpha-helical structure is seen in the urea denatured state at high temperature. In the absence of Ca2+, the fragments do not recombine to yield a complex resembling the intact apo protein. Thus, calbindin D28k is an example of a protein that can only be reconstituted in the presence of bound ligand. The alpha-helical CD signal is increased by 26% after addition of Ca2+ to each half of the protein. This suggests that Ca2+-induced folding of the fragments is important for successful reconstitution of calbindin D28k.  相似文献   

20.
The thermal denaturation as a measure of the structural stability of the nucleoprotein in bacteriophage T7 has been studied in dependence of the ionic environment. Optical density and circular dichroism melting curves measured at wavelengths characterizing either the DNA or protein conformational changes were compared to identify different steps of the denaturation and to follow the effect of the ions. Monovalent salts strengthen the helical structure of intraphage DNA logarithmically in the way as they do in the case of isolated double-stranded DNA. Mg2+ and Ca2+ at very low concentrations stabilize the DNA helicity. Higher divalent ion concentrations decrease the stability of the double helix because of the repulsive ionic interactions. The high structural sensitivity of DNA in the presence of Mg2+ and Ca2+ in this "in situ" environment can be related to the biological role of these ions.  相似文献   

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